More than a lucky break: disability, ambition, and a shifting theatre climate

Journal article


Worthington, N. 2025. More than a lucky break: disability, ambition, and a shifting theatre climate. Creative Industries Journal. https://doi.org/10.1080/17510694.2025.2479434
AuthorsWorthington, N.
Abstract

Shifting diversity strategy has prompted new urgency to increase engagement with disabled people and added complexity in seeking and measuring authenticity in the theatre practice. Drawing on an Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis study with actors self-defining as disabled people, this article expands on how intrapersonal and interpersonal experiences in theatre influence personal ambitions within, and for, the industry. It considers how actors interpret their career position and future alongside weighing authenticity in practice, whether progress to remove disabling barriers in theatre can be trusted as long-term. This article questions if a pause in business during the COVID-19 pandemic only added to precarity in the industry or offered necessary opportunity for increased disability engagement. The UK Disability Arts Alliance and its national #WeShallNotBeRemoved campaign are acknowledged as valuable, and actors’ lived experiences are shared as a route to more nuanced understanding of what is needed to move towards the sector’s equitable future.

KeywordsLived experience; Disability; Theatre; Policy; Equity; Acting; Accessibility; Directing; Employment; Diversity; Phenomenology
Year2025
JournalCreative Industries Journal
PublisherTaylor & Francis
ISSN1751-0694
1751-0708
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1080/17510694.2025.2479434
Official URLhttps://doi.org/10.1080/17510694.2025.2479434
Publication dates
Print17 Mar 2025
Online17 Mar 2025
Publication process dates
Accepted09 Mar 2025
Deposited27 Mar 2025
Accepted author manuscript
File Access Level
Restricted
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License
File Access Level
Open
Output statusPublished
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